-
Ban Johnson
Byron Bancroft "Ban" Johnson (January 5, 1864 – March 28, 1931), was an American executive in professional baseball who served as the founder and first president of the American League (AL).
http://wn.com/Ban_Johnson -
Bobby Bragan
Robert Randall Bragan (October 30, 1917 – January 21, 2010) was a shortstop, catcher, manager, and coach in American Major League Baseball. He also was an influential executive in minor league baseball. He was born in Birmingham, Alabama.
http://wn.com/Bobby_Bragan -
Branch Rickey
Wesley Branch Rickey (December 20, 1881 – December 9, 1965) was an innovative Major League Baseball executive elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1967. He was known for breaking Major League Baseball's color barrier by signing African American player Jackie Robinson, for drafting the first Hispanic/Black Hispanic superstar, Roberto Clemente, for creating the framework for the modern minor league farm system, and for introducing the batting helmet.
http://wn.com/Branch_Rickey -
Buzz Arlett
Russell Loris Arlett (January 3, 1899 – May 16, 1964), also known as Buzz Arlett, was an American baseball player of German descent. Sometimes called "the Babe Ruth of the minor leagues." Like Ruth, Arlett was a large man (6'4" and 230 pounds (104 kg)) who began his career as a pitcher before becoming his league's dominant home run hitter. He is the all time minor league home run king in the United States.
http://wn.com/Buzz_Arlett -
Curt Schilling
Curtis Montague Schilling (born November 14, 1966 in ) is a former American Major League Baseball right-handed starting pitcher. He helped lead the Philadelphia Phillies to the World Series in and has won World Series championships in with the Arizona Diamondbacks and in and with the Boston Red Sox. Schilling retired with a career postseason record of 11–2, which is equivalent to a .846 postseason winning percentage, a major-league record among pitchers with at least 10 decisions.
http://wn.com/Curt_Schilling -
Earl Rapp
Earl Wellington "Rappy" Rapp (May 20, 1921 in Corunna, Michigan - February 13, 1992 in Swedesboro, New Jersey) was a 6'2", 185 pound Major League Baseball outfielder who played in 1949 and from 1951 to 1952 for the Detroit Tigers, Chicago White Sox, New York Giants, St. Louis Browns and Washington Senators.
http://wn.com/Earl_Rapp -
Frank Shellenback
Frank Victor Shellenback (December 16, 1898 — August 17, 1969) was an American pitcher, pitching coach, and scout in Major League Baseball. As a pitcher, he was famous as an expert spitballer when the pitch was still legal in organized baseball; however, because Shellenback, then 21, was on a minor league roster when the spitball was outlawed after the 1919 season, he was banned from throwing the pitch in the major leagues. As a result, Shellenback spent 19 years (1920-38) — the remainder of his active career — throwing the spitball legally in the Pacific Coast League. He won a record 295 PCL games.
http://wn.com/Frank_Shellenback -
George Trautman
George M. "Red" Trautman (January 11, 1890 - June 25, 1963) was an American baseball executive and college men's basketball coach.
http://wn.com/George_Trautman -
Hank Peters
Henry J. "Hank" Peters (born October 17, 1929) is an American former baseball executive. He began his career in the scouting department of the St. Louis Browns and their successors, the Baltimore Orioles, in the mid-1950s. Peters subsequently joined the front office of the Kansas City Athletics, directing their scouting and minor league system in the mid-1960s under tempestuous owner Charlie Finley. He held the title of general manager of the Athletics during the season.
http://wn.com/Hank_Peters -
Ike Boone
Isaac Morgan Boone (February 17, 1897 – August 1, 1958) was a right fielder in Major League Baseball. Boone batted left-handed and threw right-handed. He was born in Samantha, Alabama. His older brother, Dan, also played in the major leagues from 1919-23.
http://wn.com/Ike_Boone -
Jake Mauer
Donald Charles "Jake" Mauer (born December 20, 1978 in ) is a former Minor League Baseball player, and former NCAA Division III baseball standout. As senior in , he set the University of St. Thomas season record for hits with 83, and is the school's career leader in hits (243), runs (181) & games (187). He was inducted into the St. Thomas Athletic Hall of Fame in .
http://wn.com/Jake_Mauer -
Jigger Statz
Arnold John "Jigger" Statz (October 20, 1897 in Waukegan, Illinois - March 16, 1988 in Corona del Mar, California), was a Major League Baseball outfielder. He played in the major leagues from 1919-1928 for the Chicago Cubs, New York Giants, Boston Red Sox, and Brooklyn Robins.
http://wn.com/Jigger_Statz -
Jim Evans
James Bremond Evans (born November 5, 1946 in Longview, Texas) is a former umpire in Major League Baseball who worked in the American League from 1971 to 1999. He now operates one of baseball's two major umpiring schools. He wore uniform number 3 starting in 1980 when the AL adopted uniform numbers.
http://wn.com/Jim_Evans -
Joe Mauer
Joseph Patrick Mauer (born April 19, 1983 in Saint Paul, Minnesota) is a Major League Baseball catcher for the Minnesota Twins. Mauer is regarded as one of the best defensive and offensive catchers in baseball. He is the only catcher in Major League history to win three batting titles. He has also won two Gold Glove awards, plus the 2009 AL MVP award.
http://wn.com/Joe_Mauer -
Patrick T. Powers
Patrick T. Powers (June 27, 1860 - August 29, 1925) was an American baseball executive who served as president of the Eastern League and founding president of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, the minor leagues organization that celebrated its hundredth season in 2001. Already president of the EL, he was elected by several minor league presidents on September 5, 1901 at the Leland Hotel in Chicago.
http://wn.com/Patrick_T_Powers
-
The Americas, or America, (, , , , , , ) are lands in the Western hemisphere, also known as the New World, comprising the continents of North America and South America with their associated islands and regions. The plural form the Americas is often used in English, as the singular America is ambiguous: America is more commonly used to refer to the United States of America. The Americas cover 8.3% of the Earth's total surface area (28.4% of its land area) and contain about 13.5% of the human population (about 900 million people).
http://wn.com/Americas -
Auburn (Áhsku·ʼ in Tuscarora) is a city in Cayuga County, New York, United States of America. As of the 2000 census, the city had a population of 28,574. It is the county seat of Cayuga County.
http://wn.com/Auburn_New_York -
Canada () is a country in North America, extending from the Atlantic Ocean in the east to the Pacific Ocean in the west and northward into the Arctic Ocean. It is the world's second largest country by total area. Canada's common border with the United States to the south and northwest is the longest in the world.
http://wn.com/Canada -
Chicago ( or ) is the largest city in the state of Illinois. With over 2.8 million residents, it is the most populous city in the Midwestern United States and the third most populous city in the country. Its metropolitan area, commonly named "Chicagoland," is the 26th most populous in the world, home to an estimated 9.7 million people spread across the U.S. states of Illinois, Wisconsin, and Indiana. Chicago is the county seat of Cook County.
http://wn.com/Chicago -
Florida () is a state of the United States. It is located in the Southeastern United States, bordering Alabama to the northwest and Georgia to the north. Much of the state's land mass is a large peninsula with the Gulf of Mexico to the west, the Atlantic Ocean to the east and the Caribbean to the south. Florida was admitted as the 27th U.S. state in 1845, after a three hundred year period of European colonization.
http://wn.com/Florida -
Los Angeles ( ; , Spanish for "The Angels") is the second most populous city in the United States, the most populous city in the state of California and the western United States, with a population of 3.83 million within its administrative limits on a land area of . The urban area of Los Angeles extends beyond the administrative city limits with a population of over 14.8 million and it is the 14th largest urban area in the world, affording it megacity status. The metropolitan statistical area (MSA) is home to nearly 12.9 million residents while the broader Los Angeles-Long Beach-Riverside combined statistical area (CSA) contains nearly 17.8 million people. Los Angeles is also the seat of Los Angeles County, the most populated and one of the most multicultural counties in the United States. The city's inhabitants are referred to as "Angelenos" ().
http://wn.com/Los_Angeles -
Mexico, (pronounced ; ), officially known as the United Mexican States (), is a federal constitutional republic in North America. It is bordered on the north by the United States; on the south and west by the Pacific Ocean; on the southeast by Guatemala, Belize, and the Caribbean Sea; and on the east by the Gulf of Mexico. Covering almost 2 million square kilometres (over 760,000 sq mi), Mexico is the fifth-largest country in the Americas by total area and the 14th largest independent nation in the world. With an estimated population of 111 million, it is the 11th most populous country and the most populous Hispanophone country on Earth. Mexico is a federation comprising thirty-one states and a Federal District, the capital city.
http://wn.com/Mexico -
San Francisco, officially the City and County of San Francisco is the fourth most populous city in California and the 12th most populous city in the United States, with a 2009 estimated population of 815,358. The only consolidated city-county in California, it encompasses a land area of on the northern end of the San Francisco Peninsula, giving it a density of 17,323 people/mi² (6,688.4 people/km²). It is the most densely-settled large city (population greater than 200,000) in the state of California and the second-most densely populated large city in the United States. San Francisco is the financial, cultural, and transportation center of the San Francisco Bay Area, a region of more than 7.4 million.
http://wn.com/San_Francisco -
St. Louis ( or ; French: Saint-Louis or St-Louis, ) is an independent city and the second largest city in the U.S. state of Missouri. The city itself has an estimated population of 354,361 and is the principal municipality of Greater St. Louis, population 2,879,934, the largest urban area in Missouri and 16th-largest in the United States.
http://wn.com/St_Louis_Missouri -
The United States of America (also referred to as the United States, the U.S., the USA, or America) is a federal constitutional republic comprising fifty states and a federal district. The country is situated mostly in central North America, where its forty-eight contiguous states and Washington, D.C., the capital district, lie between the Pacific and Atlantic Oceans, bordered by Canada to the north and Mexico to the south. The state of Alaska is in the northwest of the continent, with Canada to the east and Russia to the west across the Bering Strait. The state of Hawaii is an archipelago in the mid-Pacific. The country also possesses several territories in the Caribbean and Pacific.
http://wn.com/United_States -
Venezuela (; ), officially called the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela (Spanish: República Bolivariana de Venezuela), is a tropical country on the northern coast of South America. It borders Colombia to the west, Guyana to the east, and Brazil to the south. Its roughly northern coastline includes numerous islands in the Caribbean Sea, and in the north east borders the northern Atlantic Ocean. Caribbean islands such as Trinidad and Tobago, Grenada, Curaçao, Aruba and the Leeward Antilles lie near the Venezuelan coast. Venezuela's territory covers around with an estimated population of 26,414,816. Venezuela is considered a country with extremely high biodiversity, with habitats ranging from the Andes mountains in the west to the Amazon Basin rainforest in the south, via extensive llanos plains and Caribbean coast in the center and the Orinoco River Delta in the east.
http://wn.com/Venezuela -
http://wn.com/Washington_DC
- aluminum
- American League
- Americas
- antitrust laws
- Appalachian League
- Arizona Fall League
- Arizona League
- Atlanta Braves
- Auburn, New York
- Ban Johnson
- Baseball
- Baseball America
- Baseball awards
- baseball bat
- Bluefield Orioles
- Bobby Bragan
- Branch Rickey
- Buzz Arlett
- California League
- Canada
- Carolina League
- Chicago
- Cleveland Indians
- Cocoa Rookie League
- College World Series
- Columbus Clippers
- Connecticut League
- Cotton States League
- Curt Schilling
- Detroit Tigers
- disabled list
- Earl Rapp
- farm system
- Florida
- Florida State League
- Fort Myers Miracle
- Frank Shellenback
- free agent
- Frontier League
- George Trautman
- Great Depression
- Gulf Coast League
- Gulf States League
- Hank Peters
- History of baseball
- Ike Boone
- independent baseball
- International League
- Jake Mauer
- Jigger Statz
- Jim Evans
- Joe Mauer
- Kansas City Royals
- Lone Star League
- Los Angeles
- Lynchburg Hillcats
- Mexican League
- Mexico
- Midwest League
- Minnesota Twins
- National League
- New England League
- New York Yankees
- New York-Penn League
- North America
- Northwest League
- Northwestern League
- Omaha Storm Chasers
- organized baseball
- Pacific Coast League
- Pants Rowland
- Patrick T. Powers
- Pawtucket Red Sox
- Pecos League
- Reading Phillies
- San Francisco
- short season
- Southern Association
- Spring training
- St. Louis Cardinals
- St. Louis, Missouri
- Texas League
- Texas Winter League
- Twin Ports League
- Umpire (baseball)
- United States
- Venezuela
- Washington Nationals
- Washington, DC
- Winter Meetings
- wooden
- World War II
The Minors
Releases by album:
Album releases
Off Minor
Releases by album:
Album releases
Some Blood
Innominate
-
Cadaveric
-
Killed for Less
-
Inadequate in Absence of You
-
Demolition Heuristic
-
In Sl
-
Devil Ether
-
Allele
-
Family Circus
-
Staring Down the Barrel of Limited Options
Off Minor
-
Problematic Courtship
-
My Recovery
-
Farewell Ne'er do Well
-
Willow Weep for Me
-
Remainder
-
Perfect Strangers
-
A Transient (live)
-
Problematic Courtship (live)
-
Farewell Ne'er do Well (live)
-
Perfect Strangers (live)
The Heat Death of the Universe
-
The Heat Death of the Universe
-
This Is a Hostage Situation
-
It's a Beauty
-
Punch for Punch
-
The Transient
-
Staring Down the Barrel of Limited Options
-
Spartan
-
Monday Morning Quarterbacks
-
Off Minor
Album releases
Some Blood
Innominate
- Cadaveric
- Killed for Less
- Inadequate in Absence of You
- Demolition Heuristic
- In Sl
- Devil Ether
- Allele
- Family Circus
- Staring Down the Barrel of Limited Options
Off Minor
- Problematic Courtship
- My Recovery
- Farewell Ne'er do Well
- Willow Weep for Me
- Remainder
- Perfect Strangers
- A Transient (live)
- Problematic Courtship (live)
- Farewell Ne'er do Well (live)
- Perfect Strangers (live)
The Heat Death of the Universe
- The Heat Death of the Universe
- This Is a Hostage Situation
- It's a Beauty
- Punch for Punch
- The Transient
- Staring Down the Barrel of Limited Options
- Spartan
- Monday Morning Quarterbacks
- Off Minor
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 0:00
- Published: 08 Apr 2009
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: devilgunner2552
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:49
- Published: 29 Aug 2010
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: FortMinorVideos
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:48
- Published: 17 Aug 2009
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: FortMinorVideos
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 2:39
- Published: 16 Apr 2011
- Uploaded: 17 Sep 2011
- Author: BeMinorMusic
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 6:51
- Published: 27 Feb 2008
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: HARMONICO101
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:46
- Published: 24 May 2006
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: imladynocturne
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:12
- Published: 17 Oct 2009
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: kakpadshiyangel
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 8:55
- Published: 06 Mar 2007
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: eddiexplorer
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 7:21
- Published: 24 Apr 2009
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: roberttiso
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:55
- Published: 07 Dec 2008
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: ValentinaLisitsa
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:54
- Published: 18 Aug 2008
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: brando1795
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 6:01
- Published: 28 Feb 2010
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: bobbyxlove
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 5:34
- Published: 07 Mar 2007
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: aarnouddegroen
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:14
- Published: 03 Mar 2008
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: DjangoReinhardtJazz
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 3:19
- Published: 07 Aug 2010
- Uploaded: 26 Nov 2011
- Author: ForaMinorReflection
- Order: Reorder
- Duration: 9:35
- Published: 03 Mar 2008
- Uploaded: 27 Nov 2011
- Author: HARMONICO101
size: 4.4Kb
size: 2.8Kb
size: 2.7Kb
-
Iran files complaint over purported US drone
Al Jazeera
-
Forget Embassy Wars, the Real War Is Over Memory
WorldNews.com
-
Defense Authorization Act Will Destroy The Bill Of Rights
WorldNews.com
-
Russians stage mass protests against Putin, polls
The Star
-
Euro crisis summit: The night Europe changed
BBC News
- Albuquerque Isotopes
- aluminum
- American League
- Americas
- antitrust laws
- Appalachian League
- Arizona Fall League
- Arizona League
- Atlanta Braves
- Auburn, New York
- Ban Johnson
- Baseball
- Baseball America
- Baseball awards
- baseball bat
- Bluefield Orioles
- Bobby Bragan
- Branch Rickey
- Buzz Arlett
- California League
- Canada
- Carolina League
- Chicago
- Cleveland Indians
- Cocoa Rookie League
- College World Series
- Columbus Clippers
- Connecticut League
- Cotton States League
- Curt Schilling
- Detroit Tigers
- disabled list
- Earl Rapp
- farm system
- Florida
- Florida State League
- Fort Myers Miracle
- Frank Shellenback
- free agent
- Frontier League
- George Trautman
- Great Depression
- Gulf Coast League
- Gulf States League
- Hank Peters
- History of baseball
- Ike Boone
- independent baseball
- International League
- Jake Mauer
- Jigger Statz
- Jim Evans
- Joe Mauer
- Kansas City Royals
- Lone Star League
- Los Angeles
- Lynchburg Hillcats
- Mexican League
- Mexico
- Midwest League
size: 2.3Kb
size: 5.3Kb
size: 2.0Kb
size: 2.1Kb
size: 2.5Kb
size: 3.3Kb
size: 4.7Kb
size: 4.1Kb
logo | MiLB logo.svg |
---|---|
pixels | 150px |
sport | Baseball |
founded | 1869 |
teams | 240 |
country | |
champion | various |
website | minorleaguebaseball.com }} |
Except for the Mexican League, teams in the organized minor leagues are generally independently owned and operated but are directly affiliated with one major league team through a standardized Player Development Contract (PDC). These leagues also go by the nicknames the "farm system," "farm club," or "farm team(s)" because of a joke passed around by major league players in the 1930s when St. Louis Cardinals' general manager Branch Rickey formalized the system, and teams in small towns were "growing players down on the farm like corn."
Major and Minor League teams may enter into a PDC for a two or four year term and may re-affiliate at the expiration of a PDC term, though many relationships are renewed and endure for extended time periods. For example, the Omaha Storm Chasers (formerly the Omaha Royals) have been the Triple-A affiliate of the Kansas City Royals since the Royals joined the American League in 1969, but the Columbus Clippers changed affiliations from the New York Yankees to the Washington Nationals in 2007 and are now affiliated with the Cleveland Indians. A few minor league teams are directly owned by their major league parent club, such as the Springfield Cardinals, owned by the St. Louis Cardinals, and all of the Atlanta Braves' affiliates except for the Lynchburg Hillcats. Minor League teams that are owned directly by the major league Club do not have PDCs with each other and are not part of the reaffiliation shuffles that occur every other year.
Today, 20 minor baseball leagues operate with 246 member clubs in large, medium, and small towns, as well as the suburbs of major cities, across the United States, Canada, Mexico, the Dominican Republic, and Venezuela.
History
The earliest professional baseball association, the National Association of 1871 to 1875, comprised all fully professional teams. This system proved unworkable, however, as there was no way to ensure competitive balance, and financially unsound clubs often failed midseason. This problem was solved in 1876 with the formation of the National League, with a limited membership which excluded less competitive and financially weaker teams. Professional clubs outside the National League responded by forming regional associations of their own. There was a series of ad hoc groupings, such as the New England Association of 1877 and the Eastern Championship Association of 1881. These were loose groups of independent clubs which agreed to play a series of games for a championship pennant.The first minor league is traditionally considered to be the Northwestern League of 1883 to 1884. Unlike the earlier minor associations, it was conceived as a permanent organization. It also, along with the National League and the American Association, was a party to the National Agreement of 1883. Included in this was the agreement to respect the reserve lists of clubs in each league. Teams in the National League and the American Association could only reserve players who had been paid at least $1000. Northwest League teams could reserve players paid merely $750, implicitly establishing the division into major and minor leagues. Over the next two decades, more minor leagues signed various versions of the National Agreement. Eventually, the minor leagues joined together to negotiate jointly.
In the late 1890s, the Western League run by the fiery Ban Johnson decided to challenge the National League's position. In 1900, he changed the name of the league to the American League and vowed to make deals to sign contracts with players who were dissatisfied with the pay and terms of their deals with the National League. This led to a nasty turf war that heated up in 1901 enough to concern Patrick T. Powers, president of the Eastern League, and many other minor league owners about the conflict potentially affecting their organizations. Representatives of the different minor leagues met at the Leland Hotel in Chicago on September 5, 1901. In response to the National-American battle, they agreed to form the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues, called the NAPBL, or NA for short. (The NA uses the name Minor League Baseball today.) The purpose of the NA at the time was to maintain the independence of the leagues involved. Several did not sign the agreement and continued to work independently. Powers was made the first president of the NAPBL, whose offices were established in Auburn, New York.
In 1903 the conflict between the American and National Leagues ended in the National Agreement of 1903. The NAPBL became involved in the later stages of the negotiations to develop rules for the acquisition of players from their leagues by the National and the American. The 1903 agreement ensured that teams would be compensated for the players that they had taken the time and effort to scout and develop, and no NA team was required to sell their players, although most did because the cash was an important source of revenue for most teams. The NA leagues were still fiercely independent, and the term "minor" was seldom used in reference to them, save by the major-market sports writers. News did not travel far in the days before television and radio, so, while the leagues often bristled at the major market writers descriptions, they viewed themselves as independent sports businesses. Many baseball writers of that time regarded the greatest players of the minor leagues, such as Buzz Arlett, Jigger Statz, Ike Boone, Buddy Ryan, Earl Rapp and Frank Shellenback, as comparable to major league players. Leagues in the NA would not be truly called minor until Branch Rickey developed the first modern farm system in the 1930s. The Commissioner of Baseball, Kenesaw Mountain Landis fought Rickey's scheme, but, ultimately, the Great Depression drove teams to establish systems like Rickey's to ensure a steady supply of players, as many NA and independent teams could not afford to keep their doors open without the patronage of major league baseball. The leagues of the NA became subordinate to the major leagues, creating the first minor leagues. Other than the Pacific Coast League, which under its president Pants Rowland tried to become a third major league in the Western states, the other leagues maintained autonomy in name only, being totally economically dependent upon the American and National leagues.
In 1922, the United States Supreme Court decision Federal Baseball Club v. National League (259 U.S. 200), which grants baseball a special immunity from antitrust laws, had a major effect on the minor leagues. The special immunity meant that the American and National leagues could dictate terms under which every independent league did business. By 1925, major league baseball established a flat-fee purchase amount of $5,000 for the contract of any player from an NA league team. This power was leveled primarily at the Baltimore Orioles, then a Triple-A team that had dominated the minors with stars.
==Current system== Under most circumstances, minor league teams are not owned by Major league clubs, but have affiliation contracts with them. A small number of minor league clubs are directly owned by major league clubs, but these are rare. Major league Rule 56 governs the standard terms of a Player Development Contract (PDC) which is the standard agreement of association between a minor league team and its major league affiliate. Generally, the parent major league club pays the salaries and benefits of uniformed personnel (players and coaches) and bats and balls, while the minor league club pays for in-season travel and other operational expenses.
Minor league teams often change their affiliation with major league clubs for a variety of reasons. Sometimes Major or Minor League clubs wish to affiliate with a partner that is geographically closer. In recent years, some MLB clubs have attempted to place as many affiliated teams within their blackout area, to make scouting and player transfers more convenient and to take advantage of the existing fan base, as interest in the parent team builds support for the minor league affiliate and early fan interest in developing minor league players reinforces support for the parent team as "local players" reach the majors. Sometimes a Minor League club wishes to improve the caliber of players its major league affiliate sends to play there. Sometimes a major league club wishes to improve the facility where it will send its developing players. In even-numbered years, any Major or Minor League club with an expiring PDC may notify Major League Baseball or Minor League Baseball, respectively, of its desire to explore a re-affiliation with a different PDC partner. The Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball offices then send a list of the corresponding Major and Minor League clubs seeking new affiliations, and there is a limited period of time in September within which clubs may agree upon new PDCs. If any are left over after this process, the Major League Baseball and Minor League Baseball offices are empowered to assign Major and Minor League clubs to each other.
Going into the 2010 season, the longest continuous link between major league and minor league clubs was the link between the Orioles and their Rookie-level Appalachian League affiliate, the Bluefield Orioles. The teams were affiliated for 53 years, from 1958 through 2010. Baltimore ended the PDC after the 2010 season. At the start of the 2011 season, the longest continuous affiliations will be two 45-year links: between the Philadelphia Phillies and their Double-A Eastern League affiliate, the Reading Phillies; and the one between the Detroit Tigers and their Single-A Florida State League affiliate, the Lakeland Flying Tigers. Both Reading and Lakeland are owned by their parent Major League clubs.
The current minor league classification system divides leagues into one of five classes, those being Triple-A (AAA), Double-A (AA), Class A (Single-A or A), Class A Short Season, and Rookie. Furthermore, Class A is further subdivided into Class A and Class A-Advanced (often called Low-A and High-A, respectively). Under the rules governing the affiliated minor leagues (specifically Major League Baseball Rule 51), Class A Short Season is a separate classification from the other leagues bearing the "Class A" name, despite the similarity in name.
Triple-A
This classification currently includes two affiliated leagues: the International League and the Pacific Coast League. The Mexican League is also classed a Triple-A league, though its clubs do not have PDCs with Major League clubs.Both young players and veterans play for Triple-A teams. Teams usually hold many of the remaining 15 players of the 40-man major league roster whom the major league club has chosen not to play at the major league level. Players at Triple-A on the 40-man roster can be invited to come up to the major league club once the major league roster expands on September 1, although teams will usually wait until their affiliates' playoff runs are over, should they qualify. For teams in contention for a pennant, it gives them fresh players. For those not in contention, it gives them an opportunity to evaluate their second-tier players against major-league competition.
Double-A
There are currently three leagues in this classification: Eastern League, Southern League, and the Texas League. Some players will jump to the majors from this level, as many of the top prospects are put here to play against each other rather than against minor and major league veterans in Triple-A. A small handful of players might be placed here to start, usually veterans from foreign leagues with more experience in professional baseball. The expectation is usually that these players will be in the majors by the end of the season, as their salaries tend to be higher than those of most prospects.Unlike the major league and the Triple-A level, two of the three Double-A leagues have their season divided in to two parts, the Eastern League being the exception. One team may clinch a spot in the playoffs by winning the division in first half of the season. The teams' records are then cleared and another team will also clinch a playoff slot during the second half. Wild cards are used to fill out the remaining teams. Usually, four teams qualify for the league playoffs. This system is used at the Class A level as well.
Class A
Class A is a classification comprising two sub-classifications: Class A-Advanced and Class A. Players usually have less experience or have particular issues to work out; pitching control and batting consistency are the two most frequent reasons for a player to be assigned to Class A baseball.
Class A-Advanced
One level below Double-A, the California League, Florida State League, and the Carolina League play at the Class A-Advanced level. This is often a second or third promotion for a minor league player, although a few high first-round draftees, particularly those with college experience, will jump to this level. These leagues play a complete season like Triple-A and Double-A, April through early September. Many of these teams, especially in the Florida State League, are owned by major league parent clubs and use their spring training complexes.
Class A
Slightly below Class A-Advanced are the full season Class-A leagues, the South Atlantic League and Midwest League. These leagues are a mix of players moving up from the Short-Season A and Rookie leagues, as well as the occasional experienced first-year player.
Class A-Short Season
Class A-Short Season, despite sharing the "Class A" designation, is, in fact, a separate classification from Class A. Short Season A teams are slightly more limited than Class A teams with respect to player age and years of experience in professional baseball. As the name implies, these leagues play a shortened season, starting in June and ending in early September with only a few off-days during the season. The late start to the season is designed to allow college players to complete the College World Series before turning professional, give major league teams time to sign their newest draftees, and immediately place them in a competitive league. Players in these leagues are a mixture of newly-signed draftees and second-year pros who weren't ready to move on, or for whom there was not space at a higher level to move up. Second-year pros tend to be assigned to extended spring training until the short-season leagues begin. For many players, this is the first time they have ever used wooden baseball bats, as aluminum bats are most common in the amateur game. Players are permitted to use certain approved composite bats at this classification to help them make the transition from aluminum to wood bats. This is also often the first time they have played every day for a prolonged basis, as amateur competitions typically regulate the number of games played in a week.Short-season leagues consists of the New York-Penn League and Northwest League which are the highest level short-season affiliates for 22 MLB organizations. The remaining eight clubs have their highest level short-season affiliate in either the Appalachian or Pioneer Leagues, which are officially classified as "Rookie" level leagues.
Rookie
Leagues in the Rookie classification play a shortened season similar to the Short-Season A classification leagues, starting in June and ending in early September. This lowest level of minor league baseball consists of six leagues, the Appalachian League, Pioneer League, Arizona League, Gulf Coast League, Dominican Summer League, and Venezuelan Summer League. The Appalachian and Pioneer leagues are actually hybrid leagues; while officially classed as "Rookie" leagues, several major league teams have their higher-class short season teams in those leagues. These teams also maintain Rookie-level teams in other leagues as well. The Gulf Coast and Arizona leagues are informally known as "complex-based" leagues, nicknamed for the minor-league complexes where most games in those leagues are played. All of the other Rookie leagues are short season leagues as well.
Variations in the system
There are variations to the Farm System's classes that should be noted:
Reorganization of 1963
The current minor league structure is largely based on a significant reorganization that occurred before the season, which was caused by the club and league contraction of the 1950s and early 1960s. In , the peak of the post-World War II minor league baseball boom, 438 teams in 59 leagues were members of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues. By the end of , only 15 leagues survived in the United States and Canada.
Previous structure (1946–1962)
In , the Triple-A classification was created and it became the highest level of the minors, which formerly was called Double-A. The two Class A1 circuits, the Texas League and the Southern Association, were then designated Double-A, now two rungs below MLB.Before 1963, the Class A level was a middle- to higher-rung classification. In 1946, Class A consisted of the Eastern League and the original South Atlantic or "Sally" League, and it would soon include the Western League (1947–1958), the Central League (1948–1951), and the Western International League (1952–1954), which would become the Class B Northwest League in 1955. The lower levels of the minors were ranked Classes B through D in descending order. With the exception of the 1952–1957 Open Classification experiment for the Pacific Coast League, this structure would remain intact through . (see Defunct levels, below)
The 1963 classification realignment
During the 1962-1963 offseason, the two remaining Triple-A leagues (the International and Pacific Coast leagues) absorbed the four surviving franchises from the defunct American Association. Meanwhile, at the Double-A level and below there were even more significant changes:
As part of the 1963 reorganization, Major League clubs increased their commitments to affiliate with minor league teams through Player Development Contracts, outright ownerships, or shared affiliations and co-op arrangements.
Further changes after 1963
In 1965, the Short-Season Class A designation was created, and the Northern (1965), Northwest (1965) and New York-Penn (1967) loops moved into that classification.The Georgia-Florida League disbanded after the 1963 season, while the Northern League played its last year in official minor league baseball in 1971. The Sarasota Rookie League underwent a name change to the Florida Rookie League in 1965 before becoming the modern Gulf Coast League the next season. The Cocoa Rookie League lasted only one season, but the Florida East Coast League of 1972 was based in the same region of the state. In 1980, the Western Carolinas League became the modern incarnation of the South Atlantic League. The American Association was revived as a Triple-A league in 1969 and flourished with the minor league baseball boom of the 1980s and 1990s. However, its teams were again absorbed into the International and Pacific Coast leagues in 1998 as part of a sweeping reorganization of the minors' top classification.
During the 1970s, three "official" minor leagues attempted unsuccessfully to revive unaffiliated baseball within the organized baseball structure. These were the Class A Gulf States League (1976), Lone Star League (1977), and the Class AAA Inter-American League (1979). None lasted more than a full season.
Defunct levels
Open
The Pacific Coast League, from 1952–1957, was the only minor league to obtain this classification. At this time, the major leagues only extended as far west as St. Louis and as far south as Washington, DC. This classification severely restricted the rights of the major leagues to draft players out of the PCL, and at the time it seemed like the PCL would eventually become a third major league. The PCL would revert back to Triple-A classification in 1958 due to increasing television coverage of major league games and in light of the Dodgers and Giants moving to Los Angeles and San Francisco, respectively. The open classification no longer exists in the major league rules.
Class A1
The forerunner to the modern Double-A classification, the A1 level existed from 1936 through 1945. In , two Class A circuits, the Texas League and the Southern Association, were upgraded to A1 to signify their continued status as one step below the highest classification, then Double-A, yet a notch above their former Class A peers, the New York-Pennsylvania League and Western League. Ten years later, after World War II, with the minor leagues poised for unprecedented growth, classification terminology was changed. Beginning in , the three Double-A leagues (the American Association and International and Pacific Coast leagues) joined a new classification, Triple-A, and the two A1 leagues became known as Double-A.
Class B, C and D
Until 1963, there were also Class B, C, and D leagues (and, for half a season, one E league). The Class D of that day would be equivalent to the Rookie level today. The other class designations disappeared because leagues of that level could not sustain operation during a large downturn in the financial fortunes of minor league baseball in the 1950s and 1960s caused by the rise of television broadcasts of major league sports across broad regions of the country. The impact of the Korean War in 1950 caused a player shortage in most cities in class D and C. The Class E level existed briefly during World War II, with the 1943 Twin Ports League. It folded July 13 after six weeks of operation.
Players
Only 25 of the players on a Major League Baseball team's 40-man major league reserve list may be active for the major league club, except from September 1 to the end of the regular season when teams are allowed to expand their game-day rosters to 40 players. The remaining 15 players are generally either on the disabled list or play at some level of the minor leagues (usually at the AAA or AA level). Players on the 40-man reserve list are eligible for membership in the Major League Baseball Players Association. The minor league players work at the lower end of major league pay scales and are covered by all rules and player agreements of the players association. Minor league players not on the 40-man reserve list are under contract to their respective parent Major League Baseball clubs but have no union. They generally work for far less pay as they develop their skills and work their way up the ladder toward the major leagues. Many players have signing bonuses and other additional compensation that can run into the millions of dollars, although that is generally reserved for early round draft picks.A major league team's Director of Player Development determines where a given player will be placed in the farm system, in coordination with the coaches and managers who evaluate their talent. At the end of Spring training, players both from the spring major camp and minor league winter camp are placed by the major league club on the roster of a minor league team. The Director of Player Development and the General Manager usually determine the initial assignments for new draftees, who typically begin playing professionally in June after they have been signed to contracts. The farm system is ever-changing, and evaluation of players is a constantly ongoing process. The Director of Player Development and his managers will meet or teleconference regularly to discuss how players are performing at each level. Personal development, injuries, and high levels of achievement by players in the classes below all steer a player's movement up and down in the class system.
Players will play for the team to which they are assigned for the duration of that season unless they are "called up," promoted to a higher level; "sent down," demoted to a lower class team in the major league club's farm system; or "released" from the farm system entirely. A release from minor-league level used to spell the end of a minor league player's career. In more modern times, released players often sign with independent baseball clubs, which are scouted heavily by major league organizations. Many players will get a second or third look from the major league scouts if they turn their career around in the independent leagues.
Even though minor league players are paid considerably less than their major league counterparts, they are nevertheless paid for their services and are thus considered professional athletes. Baseball cards refer to "pro record" and "pro seasons" as including both major and minor leagues. For this reason, minor league players generally consider it an insult when someone asks when they're going to "get to the pros". More accurately, a player's aim is to reach "The Show" or the "big leagues."
Umpires
The umpire is the person charged with officiating the game, including beginning and ending the game, enforcing the rules of the game and the grounds, making judgment calls on plays, and handling the disciplinary actions.The body responsible for any action related to the training, evaluation, and recommendation for promotion and retention or release of the umpires is the Professional Baseball Umpire Corp, which is an owned subsidiary of the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues. The umpires are evaluated by the staff of the PBUC at each mid-season and end of the year. Based on performance during the year, an umpire may advance in classification the following season. PBUC holds an annual Evaluation Course every year in March to evaluate rookie umpires. Participants are normally the best students from the two professional umpire schools owned and operated by the same entity. The top students who pass the Evaluation Course are recommended for the first openings in the Rookie and Short-A leagues.
Any student who wants to work as an umpire must attend a professional umpire training school. The PBUC recognizes two schools for training prospective professional umpires, the Jim Evans Academy of Professional Umpiring and the Harry Wendelstedt Umpire School, both located in Florida. The classes for each school are held for five weeks in January and February. The instructors at these schools are former or present Major or Minor League umpires. Simply attending one of these schools, however, does not guarantee that the candidate will also be recommended either to the Evaluation Course or to the openings in the Rookie or Short-Season A league. Before the umpire development program was created, the Minor League presidents would recruit umpires directly from the schools. Umpires were then "sold" from league to league by word of mouth through the various league presidents. The umpire development program first started in 1964, when it was decided that a method of recruitment, training and development for umpires of both Major and Minor Leagues was needed. The Umpire Development Program was founded at Baseball's 1964 Winter Meetings in Houston, and it began operating the next year. The program aimed to recruit more athletic, energetic and dedicated individuals who would also have high morals and integrity standards. In 1968, it was decided that the program needed its own umpire training course which would be held each year. The first "Umpire Specialization Course" was held in St. Petersburg, Florida the following year.
Presently, the candidates for a job in professional umpiring must meet several requirements in order to be considered. An applicant must have a High School Diploma or a G.E.D., must be athletic, and also must have 20/20 vision, no matter if they wear glasses or contact lenses. They must also have good communication skills, good reflexes and coordination, and must have trained at one of the two professional umpire schools.
Minor League Baseball/NAPBL
Minor League Baseball, formerly the National Association of Professional Baseball Leagues and also known in the past as NAPBL, National Baseball Association, and NA, is the organization which oversees the governing and organization of minor league baseball in North America.The NAPBL formed in 1901 as a reaction to the warfare going on between the National League and the American League. The presidents of the other professional baseball leagues then in existence were concerned that the two "major leagues" and their continuing pirating of players and even whole teams were a threat to the existence of professional baseball in the United States and Canada. At the time, the National and American Leagues were not seen as "major leagues", but only as leagues which existed in larger cities. Led by Patrick T. Powers, then-president of the Eastern League, the larger minor leagues then in existence banded together to control their own fates. Powers' idea was that, instead of going head-to-head with the National and American Leagues, the other leagues should set standard rules for officiating, player drafts, contracts, and location of teams. Fourteen leagues (the Eastern League, Western League, New England League, New York State League, Pacific Northwest League, Southern Association, Three-I League, Carolina League, Connecticut League, Cotton States League, Iowa-South Dakota League, Michigan State League, Missouri Valley League and Texas League) signed the agreement to begin play under the new rules effective with the 1902 season. Many leagues refused to join, fearing that the creation of the NA was just an attempt at forming another "major" league, and that its rules and territorial limits would interfere with their independence. When that fear failed to materialize, however, more and more leagues joined the NA until, within a few years, it consisted of thirty-five leagues.
Patrick Powers resigned his presidency of the NA in 1909 in order to concentrate on his private business interests. The Association managed to maintain its original purpose for about twenty years, but during the Great Depression, many leagues began to fold, and the Association needed to look for more funding in order to keep minor league baseball going. This funding came from the same major league teams which the NA had been created to protect itself from. Starting in 1931, major league teams began affiliation agreements with minor league teams. Branch Rickey, president of the St. Louis Cardinals, was the architect of the system which exists today, in which most minor league teams are affiliates of major league teams, supplying the Majors with development of younger players in exchange for financial support from the major league teams with which they are affiliated.
Because so many professional players went to fight during World War II, the number of teams and leagues decreased even more until the end of the war. From 1945, when there were only twelve leagues left in the NA, there were fifty-nine in 1949. That number has decreased until, today, there are seventeen.
In 1999, the NAPBL formally changed its name to Minor League Baseball, which governs the minor league system, although there are several independent leagues which do not fall under the group's aegis.
Presidents of the NAPBL and Minor League Baseball
List of leagues and teams
;AAA;AA
;A-Advanced leagues
;A
;Short-Season A
;Rookie-Advanced leagues
;Rookie
;Off-season leagues
;Independent leagues These leagues are not affiliated with Major League Baseball or Minor League Baseball and operate as fully independent professional leagues
Team rosters
Awards
:See: MiLB This Year in Minor League Baseball Awards and Baseball awards#U.S. minor leagues
Top 100 teams
During its centennial celebration in 2001, Minor League Baseball compiled a list of the one-hundred best minor-league baseball teams of the century.
See also
References
External links
Category:History of baseball Category:Professional sports leagues Category:Organizations established in 1901
da:Minor League Baseball de:Minor League Baseball es:Ligas Menores de Béisbol fr:Ligue mineure de baseball ko:마이너 리그 베이스볼 it:Minor League Baseball nl:Minor league baseball ja:マイナーリーグ simple:Minor league baseball sh:Minor league baseball sv:Minor League Baseball zh:美國職棒小聯盟This text is licensed under the Creative Commons CC-BY-SA License. This text was originally published on Wikipedia and was developed by the Wikipedia community.